swifteagle43 said:
Back up Back up. Lets get a few things straight:
I am sorry to hear about you family and your hard times. I am sure you WILL get special consideration once you write your story in the essay you give for college.
Thank you for your sympathy, but I believe that I should be able to stand up on my own two feet then use my family as an excuse for not doing well in school. Will I use my situation to my advantage? Yes. While I do not agree with the rules of the game, I do not fault anyone who uses them to their advantage. If someone gets in on AA, as long as they can pass the boards, then good job. If you are an AA student and can't pass the boards, then it is a shame because that place could have gone to a student that could have passed (remember, good "minority" applicants don't need AA to get in. They don't need a crutch).
I never said the TEST was UNFAIR!! I said it was made up by people who are not from similar backgrounds. Women also perform bad on things like the SAT because it is designed from the male mind perspective.
Yes, because the MCAT doesn't ask about how to apply makeup? /sarcasm
Since I can't comment on the MCAT (since that is about a year away for me), I'll talk about the college admissions tests. I took both the SAT and the ACT before college. I will agree that the SAT can be very biased towards people who took classes becasue a good portion of the verbal is comprised of stupid little "a is to b as c is to ______" I believe that the ACT is a better test because it tests on actual subjects that the students took and more subjects then the SAT. Thus, if you don't accel at the verbal section, you could always make it up in social studies, science, math, etc. Granted, I got basically the same score on both. 1240 on the SAT and a 28 on the ACT (28=1270 using the UC systems conversion table).
Thats a tricky question in two respects. Yes I understand YOUR specific frustration and YOUR difficult set of circumstances. And I am sure you will get specific consideration for these if you mention them in your essay.
The question is not will I get consideration, but should I? Truthfully, will being in a hospital for almost a year visiting my mother make me a better doctor? Maybe maybe not. I was young. I don't remember 90% of it. I went to the hospital that my mother went through rehabilitation at (St. Jude in Orange County, CA), but I was even surprised when I didn't reconize it.
One thing you have to keep in mind is that most white applicants are not in YOUR situation! Am I frustrated by the fact that I need to score higher than even white applicants to get into a medical school? HELL YES! But-I am not upset over the fact because I realize that I also have certain advantages that I am blessed with and I am going to use them better than my counter parts.
Am I mad about AA? No. Mad is too strong of a word. On the other hand, I believe that it is much better to at least discussion what I believe to be policies that I disagree with while defending policies that I agree with. I do not believe in shrugging my shoulders and giving up because it either won't change (change is not easy), or change after I'm done.
A couple of things that you and I share are things like icons and networking to people in the medical social circle. I am sure you know or were inspired by a doctor and your parents know doctors on a personal level.
And your circle of friends(which will usually be white-exceptions in some cases) might also have access to resources that they can share with you.
I'll be honest. I was kinda of a loner in HS. I dormed my first year in college (actually, I am dorming my second year too) and made many friends of many colors and cultures. thx for playing, though.
I have access to my moms friends(who are doctors) and my dads friends(who are also doctors). I have a total of 7 doctors in my family and am fortunately blessed by this. And you will find most premed candidates that are gung-ho and do well also are blessed with atleast 1 or 2 doctors that they are close with. I also have cousins who all went to ivy league schools and my parents are highly educated. I am not the exception to the rule in south asian applicants! This goes for most asian/south applicants!
You will RARELY find this kind of situation in minority of other descent.
But that doesn't mean that you can't make opportunities themselves. Will I use my family's GP for shadowing and etc? Yes. Will I use doctors that I have access to as a volunteer for shadowing? Yes. I created the latter. It was not handed to me on a silver platter as you seem to think that any opportunity a white student has is.
You brought up a good question: Should something arbitrary as where your ancestors came from matter in admissions?
Well-let me ask you this: Does it matter who your mom and dad is? Whether they are educated or not?
I believe that it shouldn't matter to the ADCOMS. Do I view my parents education (or, as some would consider, a lack there of) to be a detriment to me as a student? No. If anything, it has made me stronger because it has showed me the importance of a higher education. Why is it so much harder for students with parents who have less of an education to learn the same lesson? Why should they replace the spot of a student who learned this lesson? There is a finite number of spots in med school. While it could be arguable that a person who did not get in because of AA (for every person who gets in on AA, there is one person who doesn't get in because of AA), why should he be replaced if he (or she) could show that they could preform better if they have a higher GPA or MCAT score?
Ofcourse it does! Because it affects you directly and you identify with those people!
Now in the greater sense: Does it matter what race you are?
As you probably know our country of America has a shameful history with slavery. We deprived people of their freedom and kept them from being educated. Now- We have created a culture of people that is deprived of education. And the best way to rejuivinate education in these communities is to use AA.
Who is this "we?" I nor my family did not own slaves. There are plenty of Americans whos parents came after slavery. We did not benifit from slavery, and it is a crime to punish us for the sins of other people's fathers.
I would like to make one point clear: Affirmative Action is a Band-Aid on the cuts that slavery left on the body of america. One day when the wound is almost healed the band-aid(AA) will be removed. The wound is not fully healed right now and therfore the bandaid should NOT be removed. As Pro-AA as I am right now I will like to see it gone by the year 2050(roughly 100 years after any real civil rights laws began to pass)
I see AA as a boy scout tourniquet. Yea, the bleeding may stop, or may not, but the arm is dead. The problem is that the tourniquet is not needed in the first place.